FEATURE: New Delhi’s dengue epidemic this year may be as bad as record-breaking 2010

AFP, NEW DELHI

Factory worker Mohammad Awwal is gripped by fever, sweats and the sort of agonizing aches that mean his condition is sometimes called “breakbone disease.” It is an annual plague in India and a hidden epidemic, say experts.

Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne disease with no known cure or vaccination that strikes fear into the citizens of New Delhi when it arrives with the monsoon rains — just as the scorching heat of the summer is subsiding.

Hospital wards are overwhelmed and tales abound of deaths and cases while New Delhi public authorities insist that only 3,500 have fallen sick so far this year — with only five fatalities.

“I took him first to a government hospital. I was shocked to see that it was packed with dengue patients. There was not even a single bed available,” Awwal’s mother Mehrunissa said, sitting in her one-room shack in east Delhi.

She is now treating him at their home, giving him multivitamins, paracetamol and water as he lies on the floor with two pillows and a bedsheet, but no mattress.

In a sign that this year’s outbreak could be as bad as record-breaking 2010, the city’s largest public hospital, Hindu Rao, announced earlier this month that it had suspended all routine surgeries to make room for more dengue patients.

The New Delhi government has blamed prolonged monsoons for the hike in infections, but says it has added beds at hospitals and increased resources for spraying insecticides to tackle the mosquito menace.

“It’s nothing to worry about, there is no crisis,” New Delhi health services additional director Charan Singh told reporters, dismissing allegations that the city of 17 million under-reports the problem.

“It is a lot of hype going on... The government is in action and we report all cases according to international guidelines,” he added.

The virus — first detected in the 1950s in the Philippines and Thailand — affects 2 million people across the globe annually, with the number of cases up 30 times in the last 50 years, according to the WHO.

Transmitted to humans by the female Aedes aegypti mosquito, it causes high fever, headaches, itching and joint pains that last about a week.

There are four strains, one of which can cause fatal internal bleeding.

In India, cases have increased sharply over the last five years — there have been 38,000 so far this year — but doctors say these numbers only capture part of the problem.

At the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), India’s most prestigious public hospital, doctors are overwhelmed by patients whose beds are squeezed together like Tetris tiles in the emergency ward, with saline drips nailed to the walls.

Medics, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that they were seeing 60 new dengue patients a day — an influx they suspected was not reflected in the official figures.

“Maybe it’s because they don’t want to create panic or because they don’t want to be blamed, but if they hide, people won’t know how bad the situation is,” one doctor said.

The former health chief at the Municipal Corp of Delhi (MCD) said that only positive results from one of the two standard dengue tests — known as ELISA test — was registered.

“There is gross under-reporting of these cases every year. I believe the real numbers are always three times higher than those projected by the MCD,” VK Monga told reporters.